60s American Muscle And 90s JDM Legends Have More In Common Than You Think
You’ve probably heard of the famous ‘Gentlemen’s Agreement’ among Japanese automakers that spanned the 1990s and a few years into the 21st century. Yes, that’s the same era which gave birth to some of the most legendary Japanese performance cars ever - all conveniently touted to have 276bhp in the name of motoring safety courtesy of the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association, or JAMA for you acronym nuts.
But what does that have to do with the classic American muscle car era of the late 1960s and early 1970s? Well it was the era which gave birth to some of the most legendary American performance cars of all time. This is the point where we cue the muscle car and JDM fanboys to go absurdly bonkers in the comments, calling me all kinds of creative names for daring to compare the two. But the reasons behind both these era creating legends are surprisingly comparable.
As it turns out, two rather significant points in automotive history have all kinds of common ground, despite their polar-opposite origins, and we have the notorious Gentlemen’s Agreement among Japanese auto manufacturers to thank for it in the Far East, and a healthy competitive spirit to thank on the ‘Murican side. Let me explain.
For a moment, erase all the images of burnt-out houses, boarded-up factories and the zombie apocalypse vibe people these days associate with Detroit. Instead, imagine roads without potholes and shiny cars filling the streets at night, with guys cruising Woodward Avenue looking for stoplight races.
That was the Motor City in its prime back in the 1960s, and horsepower was cheap. There was no gentlemen’s agreement among automakers here, just grudge matches between engineers from Ford, GM and Chrysler who would cruise Woodward in the freaking prototypes they were building to see how they matched up with the competition. People know Mustangs, Camaros and Challengers, but back then almost every car had some kind of crazy performance engine option, and it usually made more horsepower than advertised.
Why didn’t manufacturers just come out with the legit horsepower ratings? For one, insurance rates were higher the more horsepower you had, but it was also like a gigantic game of poker where the players were terrible. The idea was that if the 1967 Corvette with the 427 V8 only advertised 435bhp, then Dodge would shoot for a similar number with the 426 Hemi in a Challenger, as would Ford with their big bad Boss 429 Mustang. Of course, nobody fell for each other’s bluff, so instead they just built each car with around 500bhp. You know, just to be sure they beat the other guys.
This begs a very important question. There are many awesome classic American muscle cars, but would these three be the legends they are today if manufacturers hadn’t lied about the power they made?
Flash forward 20 years and several thousand miles east. Japan already had nimble, tossable, fun driving machines that were just an infusion of horsepower away from becoming epic. And that was just about to happen until the Gentlemen’s Agreement was established in 1989, restricting engine output to 276bhp.
Fortunately for the world, it seems Japanese manufacturers borrowed a few pages from the Americans’ book in the late 1960s, because it wasn’t long before the “276bhp” Nissan Skyline GT-R was unofficially making closer to 320 ponies. Later Skyline models - especially the many special edition variants - would go on to make considerably more horsepower yet.
It didn’t take long at all for the 276bhp figure to become an arbitrary number. Some manufacturers didn’t even try that hard to hide what was going on, like the Mitsubishi 3000GT VR4 that made 276bhp in Japan, but 320bhp everywhere else. Same for the A80 Toyota Supra, though I understand there were some differences with JDM Supras that kept them at the magic 276 number. Or were there? It’s that semi-mysterious aura that turns good cars into legends.
In the meantime, Japanese manufacturers were also engaged in a technological arms race since they couldn’t brag about horsepower. All-wheel drive systems were refined and expanded. Passive rear steering came of age. The Lancer Evo IV introduced us to Active Yaw Control. Would these innovations have come about if manufacturers were free to engage in an open horsepower war?
By the time Japanese officials realised people were being bigger hoons in 1.6-litre AE86 Corollas than anything with actual power, the whole 276bhp limit had turned to farce. It disappeared in 2005, and now we have exquisite machines like the GT-R and Lexus LFA. But here’s where I make the big comparison to 1960s muscle - there’s no question the R34 Skyline, Lancer Evo and twin-turbo Supra are awesome performance cars. But would their legendary status have been so assured if they hadn’t been underrated when new?
That’s why I feel pretty good in saying that Japanese performance in the 1990s and American muscle in the 1960s have a lot more in common than some might like to admit. Both periods are already considered golden ages for their respective performance genres, with both eras forcing engineers to make cars attractive for more than just advertised power. Yeah, I like vintage 60s American muscle, but you know what? I would be one smiling dude spending my days rolling in classic 90s Japanese tech. As far as I’m concerned, both segments are brothers from another mother. Ain’t nothing wrong with that.
Comments
I’m a diehard muscle car person, and muscle will always come first for me…But those 90s cars made me appreciate them more than I thought they would. The R34 did it for me… I miss you Paul :’)
Haha I was quite intrigued by the title, and being so that I own both a 60’s American(64 Chrysler big block) and a 90’s Japanese vehicle(90 Toyota celica ST, 2.2L GT swap) I was quite unsure of what to expect. Quite pleased with the outcome though…
Yes both have 4 wheels, 1 steering wheel, 1 engine……
As for the JZA80 Supra, the JDM spec has different ceramic turbos, (steel in other markets, to handle more boost) and the jdm does not have as big brakes either.
This is my favorite Skyline
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